海角社区

By Zoe LanceLaSonya Davis

Not everyone can look at a dilapidated trailer and envision a flourishing mobile health clinic that will provide free screenings, immunizations and health education to underserved families and communities.

But LaSonya Davis, Associate Professor of Nursing, could and did. In 2015, she partnered with St. Paul Baptist Church in Oxnard to transform the trailer into the Frances Huggins Community Health Clinic. Today, students from all disciplines help run the clinic and its annual fairs, making a real difference in the community they hope to serve in the future. A new partnership with Bethel AME Church in Oxnard will allow the clinic to one day include ambulatory care, as the University works to develop a graduate program in Nursing.

鈥淭he community has something to rely on and something that says, 鈥榃e care about your health,鈥欌 Davis said. 鈥淲orking with community members helps the students foster a sense of leadership and responsibility.鈥

When Davis joined the faculty in 2012, she brought over 20 years of nursing experience into her classroom. In addition to holding a Doctor of Nursing Practice, she is a Family Nurse Practitioner and a women鈥檚 health nurse practitioner. She encourages her students to consider the myriad career paths within the field of nursing and believes that community service enhances their educational experiences.

LaSonya Davis instructs nursing students Lorena Huizar (left) and Jacqueline Cuatepotzo

鈥淚 tell my students, 鈥業f you leave 海角社区CI the way you came in, I didn鈥檛 do my job. You should be transformed,鈥欌 Davis said. 鈥淚 try to help them develop a sense of lifelong learning.鈥

In teaching courses like Vulnerable Populations and Nursing Care of Mothers, Infants, and Women, Davis strives to help her students develop new perspectives about their work and practice the 鈥渁rt of caring.鈥

Working with community members helps the students foster a sense of
leadership and responsibility.

LaSonya Davis

鈥淚 have a sense of pride when I look at my students, and they鈥檝e been able to develop community engagement skills and a sense of accomplishment,鈥 Davis said.

Nursing graduate Dallas Lawry 鈥14, remembers Davis leading her women鈥檚 health rotation, and was struck by her approachability and passion for nursing. Lawry also remembers a moment of encouragement that has stuck with her as she鈥檚 worked in a residency program in the oncology department at UCLA, and on a doctoral program at Loyola University New Orleans.

LaSonya Davis listens to a Nursing student.鈥淚n the second-to-last semester of my program, she told me, 鈥業 expect that you will be one of the students that gets a higher degree,鈥欌 Lawry said. 鈥淚 always come back to that, that she saw that in me. Throughout the process of applying to graduate school and getting scholarships, Professor Davis has always been a professor that has supported me, even after graduation.鈥

To Davis, her students and colleagues are an extension of her family. She says that 海角社区CI is a place where everything is possible.

鈥滻t鈥檚 a place where dreams are made,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f you think it, it can happen. I can鈥檛 think of anywhere else I鈥檇 rather be.鈥

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漏 Fall 2018 / Volume 22 /Number 02 / Bi-annual

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